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I use TFS (ADO Dev Ops) hosted at Microsoft. My cost is zero, as is the cost for companies of less than 5 persons. Feel free to ping me and I can give you a demo. Setup took zero units of time.
/ravi
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We do everything with DevOps.
user stories and bugs features, test cases, etc.
source control with Git
Code reviews
auto build pipelines and deployments
... everything. Love it!!
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We also do the same. For my personal projects, I prefer to use TFS.
/ravi
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And how does the size of your team compare to 2.5 devs?
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity -
RAH
I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP
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our dev team is 12 people.
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Thanks I'm having a play with this - I like that I can hide the sections for projects, like the Repos since we wouldn't use them. It looks like this could be pared back to what we would want... will have to get the boss to look at it too.
Still maybe not so keen on the info not being 'in house' so to speak - the advantages of working 'in the cloud' aren't that strong for me.
EDIT - Ah! I see there is there 'Server' and the 'Services' so we can keep it in house. Are they otherwise the same?
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At work, we host ADO onsite, but are moving towards hosting on the MS cloud. For my personal projects, I've always used the MS cloud.
/ravi
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Just want to add that it's been renamed to 'Azure DevOps'.
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Yes, that's what I meant by ADO (not to be confused with this[^]).
/ravi
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There are some additional differences; e.g. server includes the ability to use categories (ways of grouping projects) whilst services just has the default category.
That said; unless you have a good reason, going cloud is far better (normally I'm not a preacher for SaaS as I like the ability to be able to get into the DB to do reporting/investigations/data fixes where the UI doesn't allow easy access)... You only have a small team, so running up a dedicated server for this product, managing backups, keeping on top of patching, etc will all waste a lot of time and money given you can get all of that for free. You can also integrate it with your AAD or IdP if you want extra security (e.g. to help avoid leavers retaining access to the system) though even without that, it'll probably still be more secure than your on-prem servers unless you're really on top of security.
Also - are you using source control today / if so what do you use for that; as there may be offerings that integrate better with your source control system which could better inform answers to your question.
If not - that's the more important issue than the software you use to manage work items. Again, generally I don't believe in universal rules; but there's no good justification for not using some form of source control.
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It is free for 5 people, but those using licensed VS also get free access I believe. So those using VS with Azure DevOps don't count to the 5 person limit for free access. At least that is my understanding...
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This option is definitely on the table
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The best I've used so far is Trac[^] but everybody uses JIRA nowadays...
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MS Project. Includes scheduling. Costing.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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You could create a “tracking” folder in your SVN where you check in a text or markdown file along with the changes. Have a standard template that you clone. Consider simple http header like format for searching via regex.
It will be committed on the same revision with the changes.
If you have your work files on an SSD this would be viable for 10,000+ commits or so (for searching)
Create project/epic/yearly sub folders to help organize if desired.
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One of my school's group projects was to create a small project. We named it TrackIt. I still have the Slack team setup.
Bond
Keep all things as simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere
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Put a TODO comment in the code :P
But be sure to add a description
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It's much more fun and sportsmanlike to omit the description...
Anything that is unrelated to elephants is irrelephant Anonymous
- The problem with quotes on the internet is that you can never tell if they're genuine Winston Churchill, 1944
- Never argue with a fool. Onlookers may not be able to tell the difference. Mark Twain
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I am a fan of the JetBrains Tools and therefore we (3 dev's) use JetBrains YouTrack.
It's on premise, free for 10 Dev's and you can but do not have to use the complete functionality with timereporting and so on.
Additionally if you may later want that you could directly connect their tool for code reviews, the build server application for CI and the so called HUB as the main manager for logins and projects.
But as far as i know you'd get most of this also by gitLab, which i think should also be free up to a certain amount?
Rules for the FOSW ![ ^]
MessageBox.Show(!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(_signature)
? "This is my signature: " + Environment.NewLine + _signature
: "404-Signature not found");
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Try Gitea gitea | Gitea[^] a self hosted github clone.
Exception up = new Exception("Something is really wrong.");
throw up;
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We are using Gitea on a Windows server with a PostgreSQL database for years now and it's very stable.
If you don't want to self-host it, there is a free hosted version: Codeberg[^]
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I'll add another 👍 for Gitea - dead easy to install and administer (I connected it to our AD domain in about 2 minutes) and pretty simple to use too.
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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